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Apixaban Plasma Levels Elevated in Medicare Patients Taking CYP3A4 and P-gp Inhibitors

Apixaban Plasma Levels Elevated in Medicare Patients Taking CYP3A4 and P-gp Inhibitors
Photo by Nguyễn Hiệp / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Recognize increased apixaban plasma concentrations with CYP3A4 and P-gp inhibitors in this pilot study of 35 patients.

This pilot cohort study utilized data from the Vanderbilt University Medical Center biobank BioVU setting. The population consisted of Medicare patients with atrial fibrillation receiving apixaban 5mg BID. A total of 35 samples were drawn from these patients for analysis purposes.

The intervention involved concomitant therapy with drugs that inhibit both CYP3A4 and P-gp, specifically amiodarone or diltiazem. The comparator group included patients not treated with CYP3A4/P-gp-inhibiting drugs. Apixaban plasma concentrations were significantly higher in patients receiving concomitant CYP3A4/P-gp-inhibiting drugs compared to those not treated with these drugs. The effect size was 347{+/-}64 ng/mL versus 166{+/-}67 ng/mL. This difference yielded a P value of P=0.025. There were 5 patients with concomitant therapy versus 30 patients without.

Safety data were not reported in this study. Adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, and tolerability were not reported. Key limitations include the pilot study designation and small sample size of 35 samples available.

Practice relevance demonstrates the practicality of obtaining pharmacokinetic data from a large cohort of plasma samples linked to deidentified EMRs. The certainty note indicates preliminary data. Clinicians should recognize these findings as hypothesis-generating rather than definitive due to the observational nature and pilot status. Additional research is needed to confirm these results.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
In the management of atrial fibrillation, the most frequently prescribed oral anticoagulant is apixaban, given at a fixed dose of 5mg BID. Apixaban is predominantly metabolized by cytochrome P4503A4 (CYP3A4) and is also a substrate for the drug efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp). In nearly 300,000 Medicare patients with AF receiving apixaban, we previously showed that concomitant therapy with drugs that inhibit both CYP3A4 and P-gp, specifically amiodarone or diltiazem, significantly increased serious bleeding that caused hospitalization and/or death. We hypothesized that this adverse effect was mediated by an increase in apixaban plasma concentrations caused by concomitant therapy that reduced drug elimination. Utilizing left-over samples obtained from clinically indicated blood draws that would typically be discarded, the Vanderbilt University Medical Center biobank BioVU contains >353,000 samples linked to de-identified electronic medical records (EMRs), with both DNA and plasma harvested. Of 35 samples drawn from patients taking apixaban 5mg BID, 5 were identified to be drawn from patients concomitantly taking drugs inhibiting both CYP3A4 and P-gp. Using a chromogenic anti-Xa assay, we found that plasma concentrations of apixaban were significantly higher (347{+/-}64 ng/mL; mean{+/-}SEM) for patients receiving concomitant CYP3A4/P-gp-inhibiting drugs compared to those not treated with these drugs (166{+/-}67 ng/mL; P=0.025, Mann Whitney). There were no differences between the 2 patient groups with respect to age, weight, or serum creatinine. The results of this pilot study provide preliminary data to support our hypothesis, and they demonstrate the practicality of obtaining pharmacokinetic data from a large cohort of plasma samples linked to deidentified EMRs. This approach could be used to define the role of apixaban levels in high-risk clinical scenarios and to better understand the relationship between drug levels and bleeding risk.
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